Vladimir Fedorovich Bykov - Soviet economic leader, Hero of Socialist Labor .
| Vladimir Fedorovich Bykov | |
|---|---|
| Date of Birth | |
| Place of Birth | Danilovo (urban district city of Yoshkar-Ola) , Mari ASSR , USSR |
| A country | |
| Occupation | |
| Awards and prizes | Honored Agricultural Machine Operator of the Russian Federation |
Biography
Born in April 1931 in the village of Knyazhna of the Medvedevsky district of the Mari ASSR (now the village of Danilovo in the city of Yoshkar-Ola . He graduated from a four-year school in his village, but did not have to continue his education. At age 12, Vladimir already worked in the field, easily managed with horses The first award that was received by the very young Volodya was the medal “For Valiant Labor in the Great Patriotic War”.
In 1949, Vladimir Bykov entered the school of agricultural mechanization in the village of New Torial. A year later, having received the certificate of a combine operator , he came to work in the Yoshkar-Ola MTS, which was located in the village of Kuznetsovo. He knew his first S-4 combine, at the helm of which he worked before the army, having studied the engine like the back of his hand. At 23, Vladimir Fedorovich was drafted into the army. He served in the Republic of Turkmenistan, in Ashgabat, as an artillery master in the reconnaissance battalion.
Returning home in 1957, he again began working as a combine operator. In 1960, collective farms created on the basis of neighboring villages merged into a large state farm “Semenovsky”, which was headed by a talented leader, former teacher Sergei Stepanovich Zhilin. State farm fields expanded, more equipment became available, and crops were growing. Increased threshing and Vladimir Bykov. Vladimir Fedorovich worked on combines S-4M, SK-3, SK-4, since 1969 he worked on the combine Sibiryak.
The labor successes of Bykov V.F.
In 1972, Bykov Vladimir Fedorovich was awarded the Order of Lenin, and in 1975 received the highest award of the Soviet Union - the Golden Star of the Hero of Socialist Labor. During the ninth five-year plan, he completed almost three and a half of his own five-year plan.
Vladimir Fedorovich Bykov worked at the helm of the combine for a total of 40 years. In the winter season, he worked as a car driver at a state farm or took up duty on a gas boiler room.
He left for a well-deserved rest in 2002, when he was in his 72nd year.
Literature
- A. N. Kropotov. Revival (to the 50th anniversary of the Semenovsky breeding plant). Yoshkar-Ola, 2006.